Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Twenty-Four (Bookish) Things

I first saw this meme from Brona's; who has adapted an existing meme into this bookish one to highlight some of her forgotten TBR piles. It's fun, and really helpful, so I work one too.

Our family bookcase


*4 Books on My Desk*

The Bright Side of Life by Émile Zola
Because I just can’t wait till #Zoladdiction2019 in April! In my defense, I’m reading it very slowly, devouring everything while taking notes, that I think I will finish it on April anyway. 😁

Take Courage: Anne Brontë and the Art of Life by Samantha Ellis
I have actually started this two weeks ago, but I was in no mood for another biography, after getting quite bored with The Black Count. I might take it back after Zoladdiction.




The Pen and the Brush by Anka Muhlstein
Another non-fiction; but I read this one to prepare for a post I plan to publish during Zoladdiction (if I have enough time to do it!)

The Man in the Brown Suit by Agatha Christie
Have started this a few weeks ago too, but neither a biogrpahy nor a detective story could keep me from reading Zola (I’m a chronic Zoladdict!)



*4 Books on the Bottom of the Pile*

Casino Royale by Ian Fleming
I can’t even remember how or where did I find this book. It must have been when I often shopped at the local second-hand book market, like a century ago. Should read this soon, maybe this year.

Nicholas Nickleby by Charles Dickens
This is actually the second copy I owned. I bought the first one (with movie-cover) from second-hand book market. Few years later someone sold her collections, and the Wordsworth Classic edition of this book was included. I bought it, and sold my own. However, until now I still can’t manage to read it, shame on me!

Martin Chuzzlewit by Charles Dickens
Similar to Nicholas Nickleby. In fact, this was perhaps one of the first books I bought when I seriously thought of investing in classic books. So sorry, Martin... I mean Dickens!

The Bones of Paris by Laurie R. King
Talking about TBR Pile, I also have a digital pile in my phone! This book is among the first I acquired last year. Now that I’m in for Agatha Christie Perpetual Reading Challenge, this one might have to wait a little much longer!



*4 Books New to the TBR*

The Divine Comedy by Dante (John Ciardy’s translation)
Preparing this for Adam’s coming readalong of Dante’s Divine Comedy. After years of indecisive quest of THE translation I should read, I finally made up my mind on John Ciardi’s. Hopefully I made the right decision!



Into Thin Air by Jon Krakauer
Have read a lot of good reviews on this, I’m excited to read it... hopefully very soon!

Under the Net by Irish Murdoch
This book has been on my wishlist for years, but I was still unsure about Irish Murdoch. Until Brona’s review convinced me to try.

The Rooster Bar by John Grisham
John Grisham is always one of my “autobuy” authors. Bad news is he produces books MORE regularly than my reading of his books (and it’s certainly not healthy for my cedit card!) Thus, I was deligthed when my secret santa gave me this last Christmas! Now... I must find time to read this before Grisham publishes another book. (Oh! He has!! {-_-})



*4 Books that Won Awards*

Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier
I plan to read this for next Halloween. And this is one of the books I buy for its beautiful cover!

All the King’s Men by Robert Penn Warren
A winner of Pulitzer prize... must read this soon!

The Martian by Andy Weir
It’s actually an impulse buying, because I’m a fan of Matt Damon (whose face is on the cover!). But there are good reviews about the book (I quite loved the movie). It also won the Goodreads Choice Awards: Best Science Fiction in 2014 (and I rather trust Goodreads readers than a bunch of literary cristics anyway), so, why not?

Angela’s Ashes: A Memoir of a Childhood by Frank McCourt
I bought this from a friend, having heard praises about it for years. And only today did I realized it has actually won a Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography in 1997. Well, another biography to read!



*4 Books I’m Keen to Read ASAP*

His Excellency Eugene Rougon by Émile Zola
Only four books from the Rougon-Macquart series which I haven’t read yet. This is one of them, along with The Bright Side of Life. I have ordered a copy of The Dream (it’s still on the way to Indonesia), which left only Doctor Pascal (of which OUP has not yet published its latest translation) to complete my collection.

North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell
This will be my first Gaskell, which makes me excited, but also intimidated by its length. But, to be honest, I’m rather craving for Victorian reads right now! Helena from @reading.the.classics is hosting #elizabethgaskell2019 readalongs in Instagram, and I will join in for North and South on May.

The Warden by Anthony Trollope
Besides two Christmas short stories which I read (and loved) last year, I haven’t yet read any Trollope. This year, Sir, I promise!

Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier
As I wrote above, I WILL read this on Halloween!




*4 Books I’m Thinking of Discarding Unread*

Now this is, by far, the most useful segment! I live in an apartement, thus do not have much space for keeping my books; ‘only’ one family book case (my mom and dad’s is a quarter of it, and the rest is mine – I’m a bad child, I know!) which is now almost full. I need to discard books which do not ‘spark joy’ anymore, to get space for the new ones. I will definitley discard more than 4, but these ones are for sure:

Antony and Cleopatra by Colleen McCullough
It was a longtime-ago-birthday-gift from my bookish bestfriend: Melisa, who is familiar with my obsesion with Ancient Roman things. I would have been thrilled about this one, but after having browsed some pages, I found it uninteresting (I have failed McCullough’s The Thorn Birds long ago, and I’m not sure I want to read anymore from her for the time being). So.... sorry Mel!

The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner
It’s an on-and-off book for me, meaning that one time I’m keen on reading it, but next I’d be intimidated, then really braved myself to read it, but put it down again in the end. I WILL read it at any rate, but for now I’ll just discard my copy (Indonesian translation which is meh!), and will buy an e-book when I’m ready to take it!

The Turk and My Mother by Mary Helen Stefaniak
I kept wondering why I have (bought?) this one in the first place. Anyway, I must have thrown it away long ago....

Perempuan Bernama Arjuna by Remy Sylado
Remy Sylado is an Indonesian writer, and this book is supposed to be the Indonesian version of Jostein Gaarder’s Sophie’s World – a novel from which you can learn about history of philosophy in a fun way. I was curious at that time, but it just does not spark joy anymore....! :)


How about your TBR pile? Are they under control? ;)

10 comments:

  1. My TBR pile is... a mess! I have so many books to read, I don't even want to think about it. :P

    I read The Sound and the Fury last year. It seems to be a love-it-or-hate-it book... I personally could have skipped it!

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    1. Haha... it's just the happiest situation a bookworm can hope to be into! So, don't see it as failure or something. I myself secretly wish to have so many books in my TBR :)

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  2. Interesting meme—I may give it a go as well.

    I think a group read is the best way to do The Divine Comedy—I listened to an audio version a couple of years ago and feel that chatting with other readers at the time would have made it a better experience. It is worth the time investment, though.

    I’m really mixed on Colleen McCullough—I read several of her Roman series (although not A&C) and thought she did a good job and the books were readable and the history good. But I’m not sure I’ll ever forgive her for what she did to P&P in her Mary Bennet riff. I never did read or watch The Thornbirds.

    Happy reading!

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    1. You're right about The Divine Comedy, that is one work I couldn't get through alone. So, I count very much on this coming readalong!

      For me, just NO more of Colleen McCullough... :)

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  3. My vote is that you can let that Faulkner go!

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  4. I've abandoned Faulkner too...a couple of times. Let him go!

    Thanks for the alert about Adam's Dante readalong, although I'm not sure I can make it this time around anyway.

    I also started McCullough's Roman series, but it got tedious by the second or third book.

    I've just spotted that Heavenali is hosting a du Maurier readalong in mid-May - you might consider bumping up Rebecca on your reading list?

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    Replies
    1. Hmm... you too? Now I'm really discouraged!

      I really wish you'd take the Dante readalong, but quite understand that it takes time and effort (and focus to).

      Yeah, I have spotted the du Maurier readalong too. But I'm also taking the Gaskel readalong in May, not sure whether I can handle two books in a month (and Nort and Sound IS such a chunky!). Anyway, thanks for the alert.

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  5. PS what widget do you use to make your favourites list on the right?

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